Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Enrolling by invitation

Summary

Conditions
  • Anxiety Disorders
  • Conduct Disorder
  • Depressive Symptoms
Type
Interventional
Phase
Not Applicable
Design
Allocation: RandomizedIntervention Model: Factorial AssignmentIntervention Model Description: Families randomized to Attachment and Biobehavioral Catch-up (ABC) or to a control intervention (DEF)Masking: Quadruple (Participant, Care Provider, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)Masking Description: Parents received an intervention but did not know whether it was experimental or control. All participants had an identification number that did not indicate group.Primary Purpose: Prevention

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 13 years and 17 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

Parents serve as co-regulators for their young children, helping them regulate behaviors, emotions, and physiology and supporting the development of healthy brain circuitry. Neglecting parents often fail to serve as co-regulators, which has implications for young children's self-regulatory capabilit...

Parents serve as co-regulators for their young children, helping them regulate behaviors, emotions, and physiology and supporting the development of healthy brain circuitry. Neglecting parents often fail to serve as co-regulators, which has implications for young children's self-regulatory capabilities and brain development. As children become older, these difficulties with self-regulation may become more pronounced. Adolescence represents a period of particular vulnerability for the emergence of mental health problems because of increasing demands for regulation of emotions and behaviors, coupled with on-going development of neural circuits that support emotional and behavioral regulation. The Attachment and Biobehavioral Catch-up (ABC) intervention was designed to help parents learn to interact in responsive and sensitive ways, with the expectation that children would show enhanced ability to regulate behavior, emotions, and physiology. The efficacy of the ABC intervention among parents involved with Child Protective Services (CPS) was assessed. Parents were randomized to ABC or to a control intervention. Children were followed at T1 (ages 1-4) and T2 (ages 8-10). At T1, more of the children in the ABC group developed secure and organized attachments than children in the DEF group, and children in ABC showed more normative production of cortisol, less expression of negative emotions, and poorer inhibitory control than children in DEF. ABC parents were more sensitive and showed more optimal neural activity than DEF parents. At T2, ABC children showed greater prefrontal cortex activation in response to threat than DEF children, suggesting better regulation to threat at the level of brain activation. Also at T2, children in the ABC group reported more secure relationships with parents, and showed more normative cortisol production and more optimal autonomic nervous system functioning than DEF children. In adolescence, the ABC intervention is expected to result in enhanced brain circuitry and more optimal functioning across domains as assessed at multiple levels of analysis relative to the control intervention. In the proposed study, behavioral and neurobiological development among 13-, 14- and 15-year-old adolescents whose parents were referred by CPS to a randomized controlled trial in infancy (n=120), and among low-risk adolescents followed since middle childhood (n=80) will be assessed.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT04168684
Collaborators
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Mary Dozier, Ph.D. University of Delaware